Bored Panda
“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Food,LifestyleSEP 10, 2025

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy

52
13
It’s natural to assume that cooking an exquisite dish requires years spent in culinary school or working in fancy restaurants. But in reality, all you need are a few simple hacks to make you come off as a pro in the kitchen and earn massive brownie points from the people around you. 
Thankfully, we have valuable resources like Reddit to provide these lesser-known tips. We’re talking about sprucing up regular mashed potatoes, making delectable stock, and game-changing ingredients that have been at your disposal all along. 
Enjoy reading and feel free to take some notes while you’re at it.

#1

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Learn basic sauces. Béchamel, roux, beurre blanc, hollandaise, Ragouts, marinaras. Learn the mother sauces if you want.

Remember to pat dry all proteins if you’re trying to get a sear or caramelization on the meats (Maillard reaction). Beef steaks, roasts, prime ribs, primal cuts all take far more salt than you think.

If you want those bright green, restaurant style veggies, then blanch them first by doing a quick boil in rolling boiling water, then quench in an ice bath. Shake dry in a strainer then saute them quickly in a little fat (oil or butter) with seasoning of your choice before serving.

Learn to take fish fillets and salmon steaks off the heat before they are completely cooked as they will finish with residual heat on a plate. Overdone fish is not good. Shrimp, crab, and lobster all cook very fast from a thawed state, overcooking results in rubbery seafood.

Store bought puff pastry is your friend for the fanciest and tastiest super quick appetizers and desserts.
45points

#2

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
People have been brainwashed to think salt = bad.

In processed foods yes. Because there's something like 400% of your daily sodium requirements in that microwave burrito.

But fresh cooking? YOU NEED SALT.

People will think your cooking is amazing simply because you used some salt.
35points

#3

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Using a meat thermometer. Seems obvious but you’d be surprised.
32points

We spoke with a few experts who offered valuable insights that may help elevate your home cooking by a few notches. First, they addressed the common misconceptions about making a dish look and taste exquisite. 

According to chef, culinary entertainer, cookbook author, and Dink Cuisine creator Alicia Shevetone, people think having a culinary degree is a prerequisite to making a meal to remember. But as she pointed out, it’s all about two Ps: practice and patience. 

“Anyone who commits to taking their time and cooking on a regular basis will see aesthetic improvement in their dishes. We all learn that way,” she told Bored Panda.

#4

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Dish seasoned, but tastes like it’s still missing something? Probably needs something acid like lemon juice or vinegar.

sqplanetariu:

And good to get familiar with different types of acid for different dishes – lemon or lime juice, all the vinegars (red wine, balsamic, apple cider, etc).

BaconReceptacle:

I blew someone's mind with this. She asked me to taste it because she couldnt figure out what it was missing. I immediately poured a little white vinegar in and she tried to stop me. I stirred it, and had her tasted it. She thought I was a damn magician.
27points

#5

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Most types of soup benefit from a little MSG tossed in.
27points

#6

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Every week, buy a whole chicken. You should be able to get them for $10 or less. Throw the chicken and some aromatics in a pot. Make your own chicken stock. Put it in everything. Make rice with it. Make sauces. Use it as a base for soups. Drink it hot out of a mug. Once you become a person who always has homemade stock in the fridge, you'll wonder how you ever did without.
26points

Dr. Carolyn Kittell, a doctor of dental surgery, has been cooking since her college years. According to her, many people believe that expensive ingredients make a dish stand out, but this couldn’t be further from the truth. 

“I have hosted dinner parties for more than ten years, and a dish which attracts the most compliments is the humble roast chicken with herbs I grow in the backyard of my dental office that cost me twelve dollars to prepare,” she said.

#7

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Amateur hobby baker here. I get a lot of compliments on my cookies and I've had people ask how I get flavor, shape, texture, etc.

The secret? Chill your dough before baking. It helps everything.

My mom argued that's not it until she tried it. She's done it always since. 🤣.
25points

#8

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
One clove of garlic is never enough garlic, unless the recipe is "How to Cook One Clove of Garlic." In that case, best be safe and use two.
23points

#9

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Quick pickle julienned red onions. Not only are the onions themselves great for garnish or whatnot, but the pickle liquid is a great combo of sweet/sour/salt that can be added to countless sauces/vinaigrettes/etc; I prefer to use 1:1 rice vinegar:cane sugar, with a splash of water and a large pinch of salt. I’m a private chef these days, and I use it for so many things.

blackmarksonpaper:

I do it for salads. I quick pickle fine diced red onion. Then strain the liquid and use that to make the dressing. Mix the onions into the salad.
21points

However, you may need to spend a bit more money if you want restaurant-quality pizza. According to Valentina’s Pizzeria owner Joe Carlucci, making top-tier homemade pizza comes down to the flour you use. 

“I can't say enough about using high-quality flour to create restaurant-quality pizza at home,” Carlucci said, recommending Caputo as a game-changing ingredient that can elevate the quality of your crust. 

#10

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Salt, Fat, Heat, Acid
Get a decent knife and learn to sharpen it.
Learn your stove and the heat levels, I personally do things in 4 minute intervals and adjust heat.
Practice if you can
Take a knife skills class if you can or YouTube it.
20points

#11

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Buy some ring molds. Everybody thinks you got a Michelin star when your food is perfectly circular. Regular mashed potatoes? Ring mold. Now worth $55. Sauce? Ring mold. James Beard Award.

MaritMonkey:

The fact that I made a good first impression on my now mother in law is almost entirely thanks to this trick (with some hash brown casserole things).
She was mildly impressed with the food, but then found out I had cut the bottom out of (cleaned!) tuna cans to use as molds and decided she liked the cut of my jib lol.

notapoliticalalt:

In General, making food look appeal counts for something. Ugly food can be some of the most delicious food out there, but making the presentation nice can elevate your dish even if it is just so so.
19points

#12

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
So many main dishes start with this simple process: Brown your meat in a hot pan with oil and butter to create the fond, remove, and cook your aromatics (onions, shallots garlic etc.), add/cook flour for the roux, add the base of your sauce (stock, milk, wine, cream etc.). Simmer and finish off with whatever else is in your recipe or make up your own. There are literally thousands of variations on different meats and cuisines/ flavor profiles that all start with this simple method.



Buy a wand / stick / immersion blender to make smoother sauces and aioli.
18points

For recipe creator Emily Wilson, technique is king. She is an advocate of learning as you go, especially in this day and age, where technology is at our disposal. 

“If the recipe says to finely dice onions and you don’t know how to do that, look up a YouTube tutorial,” she said. “Little things like that can really affect the flavor and look of a dish.”

#13

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Use more salt. Especially on vegetables.

I always salt the lettuce and tomato before putting it on sandwiches and I can't tell you how many times people tell me "it's *so much better* when you make them!"

Yeah. Cuz salt. It's why restaurants and packaged foods taste better.

You'll have a heart attack before you're 40, but you'll be well fed.
18points

#14

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
If you're making pulled pork and want it to be very tender and flavorful, season it with salt and pepper, then put the side with the fat on it face up in a slow cooker. Put it on low for 12 hours. As it cooks, the fat will dissolve and drip into the meat, giving it a wonderful flavor and great texture.
17points

#15

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Whenever a cream sauce starts to separate, I add an ice cube and whisk some more along with turning down the heat. The sauce comes back.

Unlikely-Macaroon-85:

This is a trick I use when I make buttercream and it splits. Works like a charm!

cabbageboy78:

Same with reheating cream sauce based leftovers. no matter how good i have made it, have a perfectly balanced roux etc. there is always someeeeee seperation if youre microwaving leftovers at work. so ill usually toss it in for 30 seconds let it warm up, throw a splash of water in and shake it up, go another 30 seconds (or until its warm enough for ya) and bam, that alfredo is almost as good as the night before.
Unfortunately there is no saving the really separated stuff.
16points

Our experts were also kind enough to share their own cooking hacks. Carlucci is a fan of mixing sweet and savory ingredients, as seen in Valentina’s “The Carlucci” pizza. Apart from the mozzarella base, goat cheese, and caramelized onions, it also has house-seasoned bacon and candied walnuts. 

“It’s always a conversation piece when it hits the table,” Joe proudly said.

#16

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Biggest mistake home cooks make : over crowding their pan.

Stop over crowding your pan to avoid food from steaming instead of roasting. You will taste a whole new set of flavour profiles.


Lpt for indian food : use fresh ground spices instead of pre ground spice powders. This is more expensive and time consuming to do regularly. So this is a optional tip only for people who regularly cook indian food.
16points

#17

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Smoked cream cheese.

Take a block or two of cream cheese, score it on top, season it on all sides, then put it on folded foil and into a pellet smoker at 200 degrees for 2 hours. Maybe add some hot honey in the last 15 minutes. Eat with pita chips or crackers, etc.

Basically no restaurants make it and everyone raved about it. Very unique flavor.
16points

#18

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Brown butter. Melt butter, let it quietly foam until the milk solids turn golden and smell nutty, k**l the heat, splash in lemon. Toss with pasta, veg, eggs, or fish and it tastes like you cooked for hours.
13points

For Dr. Kittell, it’s playing around with contrasting temperatures. According to her, she drew inspiration from a chef in her hometown who combined scalding soup with frozen dollops of cream. 

She has been serving piping hot butternut squash soup with spoonfuls of ice-cold mascarpone or gazpacho, and considered it her “dinner party superpower” ever since. 

“I have played this game at about eighty different parties,” she said. “(Guests) are aware that something out of the ordinary has occurred, yet have no idea what I did differently than all of their past experience of soups that they have ever had.”

#19

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
Add toppings when plating. Some chopped herbs, a sprinkle of nuts, a drizzle of olive oil, etc. whatever fits the dish. Bonus points if it’s colorful.
13points

#20

“Everybody Thinks You Got A Michelin Star”: 47 Fancy Cooking Techniques That Are Shockingly Easy
My biggest 'fancy technique' that I like to use to impress people is called 'reading the f*****g recipe'. No, I'm not joking. If you want to make something, go find recipes for it and then make it exactly as they say. If you like that recipe, it's yours now, you can do whatever you want to it. If you don't understand how to make something, then you look it up. This will lead you to some amazing places. I learned how to make a roux, a bechamel from that roux, what a corn starch slurry is used for, the classic frying method of (flour, egg wash, panko).

The biggest secret to cooking is learning how to make something.

Take mac and cheese for example. If you want to make your own cheese sauce you start with a basic roux. Equal parts some type of oil(usually butter) and flour. You whisk that together over medium heat 'until the raw flour smell goes away'. This usually means for a few minutes. Now you turn that roux in to a bechamel. To do this you slowly pour in milk. If you pour it all at once it will break and be completely ruined. You start with a bit. It's going to turn in to this weird gloopy dough looking thing, that's what it's supposed to do, keep stirring. After mixing that together you pour in some more milk. As you pour it's going to thin out, just keep adding a bit at a time until you're poured it all in. Once it's to desired consistency, which is unfortunately something you only learn by making it over and over again, you can then add your cheese to it. Congratulations, you've now learned some incredibly useful fundamentals that cover a variety of dishes. The next time you see a recipe with 'roux' or 'bechamel' in it, you'll immediately know how to do that.
13points
52
13